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Colourful Gypsy Moth Larva マイマイガ(蛾)幼虫

Hairy caterpillar of the gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar japonica, family Lymantriidae) feeding on a leaf of pampass-grass (Miscanthus sinensis). Note a dropping it left behind. Late-June 2008 in Japan. ススキを貪食するマイマイガ幼虫(俗称ブランコ毛虫)。本種は食草の範囲が広く、好き嫌いせず何でも食べる印象。方向転換の際、自分が葉上に残した糞を長い毛で引きずってしまってます。スーパーマクロモードで撮ったはずが、いまいちピントが合ってませんね...。

Author: sigma1920
Keywords: gypsy moth larva caterpillar feed eat マイマイガ ドクガ科 幼虫 毛虫 食事
Added: June 26, 2008


リョウブの蕾を食べるキドクガ幼虫 Hairy Caterpillar Eating Pepperbush Buds

先日動画を公開した交尾中のヨツスジハナハナカミキリの隣で発見。夕方で暗くなってきたので現場での撮影は諦めて持ち帰る。蕾を食べる毛虫は初めて見ました。花粉や蜜などを含み葉よりも栄養価が高いのでしょうか。同時にリョウブの葉を与えても口を付けませんでした。 また現場では白い花の樹種が分からなかった。毛虫の方はカラフルな模様と頭部の黒い毛束からキドクガ幼虫とすぐ分かる。その食餌植物(食草)リストから花や葉などの特徴が一致するものとしてリョウブと判明。こういう自然観察のちょっとした謎解きは楽しいものです。植物と虫の結びつきが強い場合は、片方の名前が分かればもう一方を調べる上で重要な手がかりになります。 Larva of the family Lymantriidae tussock moth (Euproctis piperita) grazing white buds of pepperbush (Clethra barbinervis). Late-July, 2007 in Japan. Music : Breaking Point - Live For Today

Author: sigma1920
Keywords: tussock moth larva caterpillar eat feed キドクガ ドクガ科 幼虫 毛虫 食餌
Added: July 26, 2007


コナラを食害するドクガ幼虫:微速度撮影 Tussock Caterpillar Pt 1/2 : Time-lapse

食樹のコナラを葉縁から食べ進むドクガ科ドクガの幼虫をwebカメラで微速度撮影してみました(4時間15分)。途中で2粒、脱糞してました♪ Time-lapse video of a vegetarian caterpillar of the family Lymantriidae moth (Artaxa subflava) eating oak leaves (Quercus serrata). Warning : The hairs of this species are toxic to human skin. Soundtrack (audioswapped) : Handel Music Box - Entree

Author: sigma1920
Keywords: tussock moth caterpillar larva time-lapse webcam ドクガ ドクガ科 幼虫 毛虫 毒蛾 微速度撮影 食事 脱糞
Added: May 30, 2007


モンシロドクガ幼虫 Hairy Tree Climber

桜(オオヤマザクラ)の幹を元気に登っていました。体長13mm。花より団子より葉っぱ♪ Caterpillar of Lymantriidae tussock moth (Sphrageidus similis) climbing the trunk of a cherry tree (Prunus sargentii Rehder). They have toxic hairs. This young climber looks determined because cherry leaves are one of their favorite foods. Early-May, 2007 in Japan. Music : Madison Park - All About the Groove

Author: sigma1920
Keywords: moth caterpillar larva モンシロドクガ ドクガ科 幼虫 毛虫
Added: May 9, 2007




More Information About Lymantriidae

Lymantriidae
Caterpillar of the pale tussock moth,Calliteara pudibundaCoin is c.2 cm across.
Caterpillar of the pale tussock moth,
Calliteara pudibunda
Coin is c.2 cm across.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Suborder: Ditrysia
(unranked): Macrolepidoptera
Superfamily: Noctuoidea
Family: Lymantriidae
Hampson, 1893
Subfamily: Lymantriinae
Diversity
About 350 genera,
2,500-2,700+ species
Tribes

Lymantriini
Orgyiini
Nygmiini
Leucomini
Arctornithini

Lymantriidae or Liparidae[verification needed] is a family of moths with about 350 known genera and over 2,500 known species found all over the world, in every continent except Antarctica. They are particularly concentrated in sub-Saharan Africa, India, Southeast Asia and South America; one estimate lists 258 species in Madagascar alone (Schaefer, 1989). Apart from oceanic islands, notable places that do not host Lymantriids include New Zealand, the Antilles, and New Caledonia (Schaefer , 1989).

Contents

Description

Adult moths of this family do not feed. They usually have muted colours (browns and greys), although some are white, and tend to be very hairy. Some females are flightless, and some have reduced wings. Usually the females have a large tuft at the end of the abdomen. The males, at least, have tympanal organs (Scoble, 1995). They are mostly nocturnal, but Schaefer (1989) lists 20 confirmed diurnal species and 20 more likely diurnal species (based on reduced eye size).

The larvae are also hairy, often with hairs packed in tufts, and in many species the hairs break off very easily and are extremely irritating to the skin (especially members of the genus Euproctis; Schaefer, 1989). This highly effective defence serves the moth throughout its life cycle as the hairs are incorporated into the cocoon, from where they are collected and stored by the emerging adult female at the tip of the abdomen and used to camouflage and protect the eggs as they are laid. In others, the eggs are covered by a froth that soon hardens, or are camouflaged by material the female collects and sticks to them (Schaefer, 1989). In the larvae of some species, hairs are gathered in dense tufts along the back and this gives them the common name of tussocks or tussock moths.

Lymantria means "defiler", and several species are important defoliators of forest trees, including the gypsy moth Lymantria dispar, the douglas-fir tussock moth Orgyia pseudotsugata, and the nun moth Lymantria monacha. They tend to have broader host plant ranges than most Lepidoptera. Most feed on trees and shrubs, but some are known from vines, herbs, grasses and lichens (Schaefer, 1989).

Systematics

Unusually, this family is not divided into subfamilies but only into tribes. This owes to the fact that the diversity and phylogeny of tropical lymantriids is not well known (Ferguson 1978, Holloway 2006).

Genera incertae sedis - that is, not assigned to a tribe - include:

  • Birnara
  • Cispia
  • Locharna
  • Parapellucens
  • Parvaroa
  • Pseudarctia
  • Sitvia
  • Tamsita


Notable species and genera

See also list of lymantriid genera

Literary references

In The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy, the character Pappachi discovers a new species of lymantriid with "unusually dense dorsal tufts". At first, his discovery is misclassified as a race of an existing species. After Pappachi retires from the post of Imperial Entomologist, a taxonomic revision makes his moth the type species of a new genus. Pappachi's original claim is forgotten and the new genus is named for a former subordinate. The disappointment embitters Pappachi:

In the years to come, even though he had been ill-humored long before he discovered the moth, Pappachi's Moth was held responsible for his black moods and sudden bouts of temper. Its pernicious ghost--grey, furry and with unusually dense dorsal tufts--haunted every house that he ever lived in. It tormented him and his children and his children's children.

--Arundhati Roy, The God of Small Things, pg. 48

References

  • Chinery, Michael (1991): Collins Guide to the Insects of Britain and Western Europe (2nd edition).
  • Ferguson, D.C. (1978): Noctuoidea, Lymantriidae. In: The Moths of America North of Mexico (vol. 22-2). London: E.W. Classey.
  • Schaefer, Paul (1989): Diversity in form, function, behavior, and ecology, In: USDA Forest Service (ed.): Proceedings, Lymantriidae: a comparison of features of New and Old World tussock moths: 1-19. Broomall, PA
  • Scoble, M. J. (1992): The Lepidoptera: Form, function and diversity (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press.
  • Skinner, Bernard (1984): Colour Identification Guide to Moths of the British Isles.
  • Schintlmeister, Alexander (2004): The Taxonomy of the genus Lymantria Hubner, [1819] (Lepidoptera: Lymantriidae).

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